Today my focus is on tree bark, a simple subject that never feels simple. Bark is one of my favorite subjects to look for natural texture. Even trees of the same kind won’t repeat themselves; each trunk grows its own map of lines, cracks, scales, and scars. It’s like fingerprints for forests.
These frames are all about that uniqueness. Some surfaces peel into rugged sheets, some compress into tight ripples, and others turn into living walls for tiny vines and orchids. I love how vines, fungi, and even orchids quietly claim a spot on the trunk, adding new shapes and stories to the bark beneath them. A tree isn’t just a tree; it’s a small neighborhood.
I went monochrome to let the textures speak. Color can distract, but black and white draws attention to contrast, edges, and the subtle shifts between highlight and shadow. I increased the highlights up and pulled the blacks down to deepen the grooves and make the patterns more graphic. The result feels tactile, almost like you could run your fingers along the frames and feel the ridges.
What I enjoy most is how bark records time; weather, growth, and survival all etched into the surface. Some areas look harsh and armored; others feel soft and layered, as if the tree is still mid-sentence. Add a vine curling through or a cluster of orchids taking hold, and the whole scene becomes even more remarkable. Nature keeps building on nature.
It’s a reminder that beauty doesn’t need grand landscapes. Sometimes it’s an arm’s length away, wrapped around a trunk you’ve passed a hundred times.
”To see in color is a delight for the eye, but to see in black and white is delight for the soul.”
~ Andri Cauldwell
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@funtraveller
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